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a WRDNESDAT. TUN 9, 19% THE ON SALE ©, university !Makes Discovery; | to Save Chickens |,.,., plac tion: Connect your chicken ra t thing in pquitry prot os morning in bera’ ar SHE HAD SEATTLE anqual Anne “DANDERINE” | STAR | What I've got is yours, of —~ }Just had that tired, worn-out feeling | C. EB. Donovan of the Columbia pr t < - el rw ” her? hat ehanct n rt After Ten Years of Suf-|eversining and for days at a time! to determine if the city ts paying for! Stops Hair Coming Out;|* t? And a blind woman's a beggar . * was unable to do my housework the safety of H hicker ’ = | a vd a blind wora a beeen fering, She Was Begin: ve i knew what to ty Doubles Its Beauty. path gh +7 gat g way oer gate ning to Think She) noxt, tor 1 had trie so many aitter-- Matthews Indorses out of Washington, ‘The war fas atments nd medicine J sas . torte in Closing There thousand Would Never Be Well) ent ep much money withou Advertising Drive tives te Oe ; getting relief that I had my De. M thews, pastor of the CHAPTER 1 i Rate aha ea ed aneeat | Tanlac Again Proves | tin.) finding anything First Pr rian church, addressed Witty Pitty cn cee, ium ool eek sak Merit me, but I saw about Tanlac in the | the " funds for the It was late fall of early winter In} “Oh. Dom, ae eee aut papers and after reading of several) Chamber of Commerce Seattle ad the elfy of Cleveland lh Pato sa tg ton “The way Taniac has restored my | trouble, I decided try Tanlac my-| New Washington hotef, He urged Annie Squires, met at a certain | 1? lim r | Realth is simply wonderful and 1| self and I am glad | did, for I am/|the campaign be carried thru to a treet corner, as wan their daily “wel ” , a “ Well, then eaid Mary Warrer am glad of the opportunity to tell) now feeling just ike a new woman. | complete succe © that unfavorable wont; the former eoming from her Fo ign ly a gta everybody about this grand medi-|I started improving with the first! or ne prevailing the Must p in one of the great department | yi cok well, then—and what eine,” said Mrs. G. F. Stevens, of| few doses and now I can eat any | about the city be eradicated tores, the other from her wor ee aed pee ca toe $920 South Harvard Boulevard, Los | thing I want without even a sign of | factory six blocks up the str . |= aaaies didia ‘tenes tik Guar Sar Angeles, Cal indige r trouble with my stom. ’ Lo, Mollie,” said Annie; and sptteng te oe te tea Mie tne troubled me and for sev.| tight and feel Lake, Says Ross their chill corner rewidezvou Aisa fartee OES BE jeral years I have been in very bad| That worn-out shahtind mtg yal gs Cal found some sort of standing room | et ae eT dane what Indigestion and ev the lightest of work, which for has be he ne advocated on the atmps as it serecshed its way | soit elena tae e,'an ton ond, GU foods caused gas form on my rudgery, is 1 Ta gee angie : “ Jaround the curves, thru che crowded | ti Cl oa st ok tthe aaiiein at Stomach. This gas at times .would sing yJ superintendent of the jDortions of the. city, It wae lon! 00 1.6 boys still in thelr uniforms Press up ar my heart and and r t artment. Ross de A few cents buys “Danderine ¥ Kot seats, thre aster Very one's got a girl on his arm. jase such a eas of 1 . Gan ake reset After an application Danderine ur, for they lived ar out bee oh ge egay A gh be lol sa Fould hardly it, I became is sold in Seattle by Rartell | “cq 1,000 year ou can not fir n hair or any a week doen not & then? As for the love and marriage Go weak and nervous that the least es under the perso: at dandruff, bee y hair shows|much in the way of = + aaig | StUtt—we . | Hittle noise would upset me, so I} rection of a special Tanlac represen ‘There bs nothing so necessary as) new lif vigor, bright more Fhene cara te flerec - As tho you didn't ow. better euldn't get a good night's rest jae squires, with a smile and a 1' tative. necesn color and thi Famous (hef Of the Hotel St.Francis Says: - Never have] found a Coffee withasricha flavor or as good a Qualityas MJ'B | SURE TEST OF “For~sixteen™ years 1 have used M. J. B. Coffee at the St. Francis Hotel. My experience is world- wide. I have served presidents and kings and never found a coffee with as rich.a flavor or as good af quality’as M. J. B. Thousands of guests’ who are good judges of coffee have been delighted with this the supreme of all coffees.” Sold in One, Three and Five Pound. Vacuum Packed Cans M. J. BRANDENSTEIN & CO. Office and Warehouse, 313 Occidental Avenue, Seattle [srutscinoer vines «Siri LET QFE CORNS | Jher stre |back again | the long knitting needles, the ball of reef than to ta%& the way you! wide glance into the eyes of a young sere fights Dir ag Raga rae suid Mary Warten. | SD eee tiie unake to her com-|, “I'm. different from you, Metile?] Se: See r |1—1 ain't so fine. You xnow why 1 panion iked you? Because yc Mary Warren made no complaint you? 5 r ent; and I didn’t come from much| Hor face, calm and gentle, carried i it n a mu or have much schooling. I've been neither ning nor resignation, but por eden = he |t® wchool to you and you never a high and resolute courage, She | knew it we you plenty, and yot hrank far as she might pan eee Gi you F ‘ 4 u from 5 0 Mary only kinmgd her, but Annie with other human beings; the little ] broke free and went on | Jroop beginning at the corners. of | Te ag ha ager hea pga ho When they come to talk about} ei ra » | ahe world ¢ on, and folks marry neas, but there was a thorobred vig a ong fairness about . ray gre which, with the self-respecting | W8F Is over—you've got to han : gua ar. gl punch behind it. Besides, | cous “oe seoanan 10m makes a hit with m w badly w her| 3 1 did marry, 1 don't} wan of Bondescript nort, | mes. abo b Jons—-yet Mary War f of we ne than Anr Ar wh ned with a | fF that, I hope , h wtich| “Well, dope it out y wenty Dutch seema to be hay their ow Wien now aid Annie after a time, when at length) the two were able to find seats F bout now is Mary “ corner of was differ: |f} trifle to themselves in <o-magle othe Ate peat and out, with not even eyes to re ngehgy, ER wat''thban soseh: th and no money back of her other way nd. Gee htt to go. What are you|] was a man! I'd show ‘em peace! Bin? that's all. In my | Faden Pap sing from one| C&%—velieve me, if I lone my chanct comes te the { the evening |Mt this man, Charlie Dorenwald, I'm paper which they took daily turns in | £0!ng to Gind another some time, buying. Mary Warren began to Atty-fitty it } us, oF grow more grave of face as she sirl, would get along all right heard the news from the lands where | With @ husband if we could get one not long ago had swung and raged|—'t'* Do cinch. And now, womer fn their red grapple the great armies F¢tting pjentier and plentier, and a the wort men still scarcer and scarcer, it's nen a sudden remorse came to| "Ure tough times for a girl that saa ithe ‘4 to Mary | Dasn't eyen nor anything to get work with, or get more besides your Lookit here.” j wish He was all I had," said Mary| “Well, 1 thinking how} imply, her lips trembling I talked, Sis," 4 Annie, reach “Yeu, 1 know, But what's up to |'"& out a hand to pat the wh te night, Mollie? You're stilt Any-|0P¢ on the chair arm But thing gone wrong at the store?” She | ITY rade _my dear — that’s alll was looking at her roommate keenly, | '¢ Det ever was or will be for Well, vou see. Annie, they tod|® Woman, and now her odds ts a lot worse, they say, even for the me that times were Hirt now after | the war, and more girls ready to| “el! and stromg ones. Maybe part} ve . of the trouble with us women was| They were now near the end of we fT looked on this business of} getting married with any kind of Presently they halfway business sense. Along come bent their daily journey descended from the car against the icy wind, made their way | 0 An Mac od fools Lord! ain blocks toward the door which aghtn't both of us to know about n. They clumped | ™"88in counters and basement} + ales? | the* s the wooden building |“ i = the third and opened the weil, let's eat, Mary,” she con loor to their ro cluded, seeing she had no answer It was cold. There was no fire| 474 ry Warren, broken-hearted, | burning in the stove—they never left | M#b silent, turned to the re one burning they furnished | ™Ning routine of the day their own fue and in the morfiing. even in the winter time, they rose (To Be Continued Tomorrow) d dressed in the cold “Never mind, dear,” said Annie} During the last tentury the fa ain, and pushed Mary down into|™mous Yalu river of China has/ the rocking chair as she would have | Changed its course more than a! busied the ng. | Score of times "Let me, herself now with I wish't coal wasn't kind A blue and yellow flame at last begun back of the mica-doored stove which furnished heat for the room. too tired and cold to take aps, sat for a time, their hands against the slowly heating door. Now and again they peered | in to see how the fire was doing | Mary Warren rose‘and laid aside | garb. When she turned | she bad in her hands WITH FINGERS yellowish yarn, the partially knitted garment, which/of late had been so common in America. “Aw, Sis, cut it out™ grumbled Annie, and reached to take the knit ting away from her friend. “The ° war's over, thank God! Give your-| self a chanct Get warm first, any ways. You'll ruin your eyes—didn't | the doctor tell you so? You got ofe| bum lamp right now.” “Worse things than having trow ble with your eyes, Annie." “Huh! It'll help you a lot to have your eyes go worse, won't it?” “But I can't forget. I—I can't seem to fo Dan, my brother.” trailed off vaguely. ! "s the last kin I had, Well, 1| all he had, his next of kin, so| they sent me his decoration. And I'm the last of our family--and a woman-—-and—and not seeing very | well. Annie, he was my reliance—| and I was his, poor boy, because of his trouble, that made him a half. cripple, tho he got into the flying corps at I'm alone. And, An nie--that was what was the trouble at the store, I'm--it's my eyesf* Drop a little Freezone on an ach- Deesn’t hurt a bit and costs) only few cents They both sat for a long time in| ing corn, instantly that corn stops silence. | hurting, then you lift it right out. mid Annie at last, “it ain't! yos, magic! ho news. I know, and I've knew it.| A tiny bottle of Freezone costs 1 got to talk some sense to you.” but a few cents at any drug store, ne dark glasses turned her way,| but is sufficient to remove every unwaveringly, bravely hard corn, soft corn, or corn between “You're going to lose your job,| the toes, and the calluses, without Sis, as soon as the Christmas rush | soreness or irritation. is over,” Annie finished Freezone is the sensational discov. “Oh, 1 know it's hard, but it's the ery of a Cincinnati genius, It is truth, It's just as well to face wonderful, Group 1, at $23.50 FRASER-DATERSON Go! Second Avenue and University Street 3000 Fr In an Extraordinary Sale at 17c, for $1.00 Novelties of fine lawn, in the colors and combina- tions of colors now so much ir vogue. A Priced for this sale at 17¢ each, six for $1.00. fs, Firat Floor, ench ity Handkerchiefs Cre re) 1b ¢ Handkerch A Special Sale Group of Leather Motor Coats Cut to $33.75 High grade garments of incomplete assortments, drastically reduced for clearanc | Cape Wraps of Velour, Jersey, Serge and Gaberdine, lined throughout with plain and fancy silks. Coats of Velour, Polo Cloth and Jersey in sports and longer lengths. : A number of handsome leather motor coats in Tan and Black. All of the favored shades of the season are included, A full range of sizes. Third Floor. Specizls in Carriagzs, Folding =" Go-Carts and Sulkies Two $60.00 French (€ reversing bodies. Pullman Carriages, with Large size. Specially priced at yd's Reed Pullman Carriages, specially priced at Reed Sulkies with reed hoods, special at Reed Sulkies, with hood, special at $16.50. Folding Sulkies, special at $8.95. Folding Sulkies, special at $7. Folding Go-Carts, special at $22.50. Folding Go-Carts, special at $20.00. Folding Go-Carts, special at $1 i. Baby « Fifth Floor. arriag: ’ Yearly June Sale of Jewelry Novelties With values of emphatic interest in Necklaces, Mesh Bags, Lingerie Clasps, Fancy Combs and many other novelties. ‘Two of the feature items are: Imported Novelty Necklaces, regularly $10.00 to $18.50, for $5.50. —French Pearl Necklaces, regularly $10.00, for $5.00. . —First Piper. The Special Price Basement Offers Thursday 98 Women’s Suits At Clearance Prices ‘ —Consists of 71 Suits, all-tvool checked velours, all- wool serges and all-wool poplins and jerseys. Every Suit is of the approved style for this season. With silk lined jackets. The former price was $29.50 to $35.00. For clearance at $23.50. Group 2, at $29.50 —Consists of 27 high grade Suits of tricotine, silver- tone, velour and fine French serge. —All_ new models, in conservative styles, finely tail- ored. Mostly in navy—a good range of sizes, Formerly priced at $37.50 and $45.00. For clearance at $29.50, ©